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Aya Maasarwe: Murdered student's body flown home from Australia

The family of an Israeli Arab student
whose murder has shocked Australia have left the nation with her body,
hours after her father gave a moving tribute.
Aya Maasarwe, 21, died in Melbourne last week. Police have since charged a man with her rape and murder.

Ms Maasarwe's death has led to much public anger, and renewed debate about women's safety in Australia.

Her father, Saeed Maasarwe, said his daughter had taught him "to see the light in the dark".

He and other relatives travelled to Australia last week, where they
attended vigils in Melbourne alongside thousands of mourners.

The family left Melbourne on Tuesday with several tributes from members
of the public, local media reported. Ms Maasarwe's funeral is expected
to take place on Wednesday.

Speaking through tears on Monday, Mr Maasarwe said he wanted to honour
his daughter's life and positivity, as he urged the world to become more
safe.

"Look in the stars just to see the light in the dark. This I studied from Aya, not from me," he told reporters.

"I wish all the people see the light and go to the light. Don't be in the dark."

He added: "We want to make the world more peace, more safety, more beautiful and more smiles."

The family have asked the media to spell her name, Aya - to reflect that
she was a Palestinian with Israeli citizenship - and not Aiia, which
officials had been using, based on her passport.

Mr Maasarwe's words drew many messages of support from the public.

Ms Maasarwe was a student of Chinese and English at a university in
Shanghai. She had been on an exchange programme at Melbourne's La Trobe
University.

She was attacked at night while speaking to her sister on the phone, authorities said.

A 20-year-old Australian man, Codey Herrmann, is charged with her murder. He will next face a court hearing in June.